The Suns’ decision to bring back Mark Williams on a three-year deal does more than settle the starting center spot. It also tightens the squeeze on Khaman Maluach, the 10th overall pick from last summer who spent much of his rookie year waiting for his turn.
Phoenix made the Williams trade just minutes before selecting Maluach, and the frontcourt picture was crowded from the jump. Nick Richards was still on the roster, Oso Ighodaro was there too, and the result was a rookie season that never really opened up for the 7-foot-1 center. Maluach played in 46 games and finished the year as the third-string center behind Williams and Ighodaro.
That doesn’t mean the Suns are backing off his development. It just means the path is going to be messier than a simple depth chart. General manager Brian Gregory was asked earlier this week how Phoenix plans to create minutes for Maluach next season, and he made it clear the answer won’t be handed out in July.
"I think a lot of those things work out as the season progresses. Right now, the most important thing for Khaman is to practice well and get ready for summer league, and to play well at summer league," Gregory said. "There's a lot of different ways that things work out when it comes to minutes and playing time, and sometimes in July a lot of different things are thrown out there.
"Usually in the season, things work out the kind of way they're supposed to work out, and everybody's got to be ready. You know what I mean? ...
You just got to be ready when you get your chance. And I think those guys, it's a good luxury to have.
At the same time, there's the development piece, there's the team piece, and there's the win tonight's game piece, and all those things got to kind of come together."
For Maluach, the next chance is here now. He’s one of the main names on the Suns’ Summer Suns roster, and they open tonight in Las Vegas at 8:00 p.m. MST against the Portland Trail Blazers.
The rookie season showed flashes, but it also underscored how much room he still has to grow. That was always part of the deal with Maluach, who has only played basketball since he was 13.
Even so, the Suns did see what can happen when opportunity knocks. Injuries to Williams opened the door at times last season, and Maluach stepped in for stretches.
That could happen again. Williams’ injury history all but guarantees Maluach will get more minutes at some point, and Phoenix could also get inventive with its lineups. One option would be moving Ighodaro to the 4 next to Maluach, giving the Suns a different look while keeping the young center on the floor.
For now, though, Vegas is the proving ground. Maluach said he’s approaching Summer League with the same mindset he carried through his rookie year.
"It's year two. It's my second time doing this, but I'm going in with the same mentality I had last year, the same mentality I had throughout the whole season - just getting better each and every day, and just using all the reps, and (taking) advantage of every rep, and not wasting any reps, so that by the time the season gets here, I'm really prepared," Maluach said.
In Other News...
Summer League Could Expose Which Suns Prospects Are Actually Ready
The Suns head into 2026 Summer League with a roster that should tell them plenty about the next wave of their young talent. A mix of rookies and more seasoned prospects gives Phoenix a chance to sort through different stages of development, with first-rounders Peat and Maluach drawing the most attention and second-round picks Fleming and Brea also getting a real chance to show where they stand.
For a team trying to build out its future, this is the kind of setting that can separate long-term projects from players who are ready to push for a bigger role sooner rather than later. Peat, Maluach, Fleming and Brea all arrive with different expectations, and the Suns will be watching not just for production, but for the kind of progress that hints at how quickly each one can fit into the bigger picture. [Read more 🡒]
Miles Bridges Brings Another Off Court Cloud Over The Suns
Miles Bridges is back in the middle of an off-court legal dispute that has drawn fresh attention around the Suns, with the matter tied to custody arrangements and competing claims between Bridges and Mychelle. Earlier this year, Bridges was granted a temporary restraining order after alleging cyberstalking and harassment, adding another layer to a situation that has already spilled well beyond the basketball court.
Both sides have now filed legal documents accusing the other of misconduct in connection with those custody issues, keeping the case active and the details in motion. For Phoenix, it is another unwelcome distraction attached to a player whose off-court history has already made every new development a sensitive one, and the Suns have not commented on the situation. [Read more 🡒]
